FIGHTER FOR DEMOCRACY – a book by Beyene Solomon
This is the story of Beyene Solomon, who started and led a labor movement in Ethiopia encompassing several hundred thousand workers. It was the first democratic institution organized in Ethiopia and became an important part of African labor and social movement in the 1960-70s. However, when Emperor Haile Selassie was overthrown in 1974, Mr. Solomon was imprisoned. Surviving seven years of prison, he later worked for the ILO before he
was forced out of Ethiopia in 1998.
Beyene’s memoir is the story of a brave and determined self-made man
fighting and suffering for a democratic cause. And it is the sad story of
the struggles of a proud African nation which is still in the throes of finding
itself. Furthermore, it describes the diaspora of hundreds of thousands of
Ethiopians and Eritreans, many who ended up as political refugees in the
United States. His memoir is of historic significance.
From Eritrea, Beyene Solomon left his farm to work in factories in the
Ethiopian capital of Addis Ababa. Rebelling against management injustices,
he helped form an Ethiopian labor movement. As President of the
Confederation of Ethiopian Labor Unions (CELU), Beyene organized
Ethiopian and Eritrean industrial workers and effectively fought for workers
rights against government and management. He was instrumental in
obtaining assistance from international labor groups and was active in
African labor organizations. Until 1974 when the military overthrew the
Emperor, CELU was part of an important democratization process in
Ethiopia. While other prominent Ethiopians were murdered, Beyene
Solomon miraculously survived, perhaps because of his local and
international following. Until 1998 he had lived in Ethiopia for 52 years.
Residing in Silver Spring, MD since 1999 with his children, he is now a
US citizen.